US cyber agency keeps the work of the ‘Ministry of Truth’ alive, leak shows
By: Rachel Marsden
A little-known agency inside the US Department of Homeland Security is on a mighty slippery censorship slope
Partially-censored meeting minutes of the Cybersecurity Advisory Committee
advising the director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA),
an agency of the US Department of Homeland Security, have been obtained by The
Intercept.
The documents reveal attempts to conflate the need to protect American “critical
infrastructure” from what the committee repeatedly describes as threats of
“disinformation” – or rather, “mis-, dis-, and mal-information (MDM).” The
meeting notes describe telecommunications infrastructure (which would include
the internet) and public healthcare infrastructure as in need of protection from
wrong-speak. In essence, it keeps up the work of the short-lived and
controversial Disinformation Governance Board, which earned the unenviable
nickname of the ‘Ministry of Truth’.
The papers focus on countering non-establishment narratives related to Covid-19
origins and vaccines, racial justice, the withdrawal of US troops from
Afghanistan, and the US’ involvement in the Ukraine conflict. It also reveals
the existence of a back channel for Homeland Security to communicate its desire
to boost or censor certain messages on Facebook and Instagram.
The nature of these online narratives being targeted for government
protection from “disinformation” just happen to coincide with those that evoke a
ton of legitimate criticism. When the government gets directly involved in
narrative policing under the guise of “infrastructure protection,” it’s a dodgy
pretext that should raise serious concerns about government overreach to the
detriment of free expression and flow of information.
No one’s blowing up the internet with mere words. No one’s causing the public
health system to fail by debating Covid-related science propagated by the
government, even if it later does indeed turn out to be misinformed or
questionable. Remember, for example, when Western officials, including US
President Joe Biden, were saying that the jab would prevent infection and
transmission – and that anyone saying otherwise was full of it? Or when the US
government spent the better part of two decades repeating that the US was
winning in Afghanistan – right up until the US withdrawal and the Taliban
retaking the country? Or how about the claim that the US wasn’t directly
involved in the conflict with Russia in Ukraine – right up until the Pentagon
confirmed the deployment of US troops to Ukraine, albeit not in frontline combat
operations. “We’ve been very clear there are no combat forces in Ukraine, no US
forces conducting combat operations in Ukraine, these are personnel that are
assigned to conduct security cooperation and assistance as part of the defense
attaché office,” Pentagon Press Secretary Force Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder said.
But based on the rules laid out by this online disinformation policing agency,
anyone who dared to reveal evidence, information, or observations that run
contrary to what the US government was willing to admit as part of the official
narrative could feasibly be considered a peddler of fake info. History has
shown, however, that they’re often proved correct.
Across the pond, French President Emmanuel Macron was asked recently in an
interview with French state media about Russian media outlets remaining
accessible in France through online platforms despite state censorship. In
evoking the bans, Macron said, “We’re using the informational weapon.” Like in
the US, it sounds like Macron is admitting that the state is using censorship as
a weapon against narratives and information that runs counter to their own.
Apparently, the public’s right to be fully informed and make up their own minds
about what’s going on in the world can just be shrugged off as collateral
damage.
It’s now becoming commonplace for Western “democracy” to use the law enforcement
apparatus of the state to ensure that its propaganda goes unchallenged online
and offline.
It will be interesting to see how well that goes down with new Twitter CEO
Elon Musk, who has been waging a war on censorship on various fronts. Musk was
asked back in March to block Russian news sources on his Starlink satellite
network. “We will not do so unless at gunpoint. Sorry to be a free speech
absolutist,” he replied. Musk has also been openly reminded by European Union
Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton, in the wake of his recent talk of
restoring free speech, that the platform would be forced to abide by the bloc’s
rules governing public expression. And clearly those aren’t very free.
Democratic Senator Chris Murphy is now demanding a US government investigation
into the financial participation of Saudi Arabia, Musk-owned Twitter’s second
largest investor, in the platform. Interesting that no one seemed to care that
the Saudis had invested in Twitter long before Musk came along. Or that
governments Murphy calls “repressive” have cash flowing into Hollywood and
American media outlets as advertisers. And that cash conveniently didn’t have
any particular color or citizenship until Musk took over vowing to claw back
free speech. Now suddenly this US official is dragging out the old foreign
interference hammer to use against Musk.
If Musk was standing up against censorship perpetrated by a regime the West
didn’t like, he’d be invited to sit next to First Lady Jill at Biden’s next
State of the Union address. Instead, US government agencies are increasingly
guilty of the same sort of repression for which they’re so quick to criticize
others.
COPYRIGHT 2022 RACHEL MARSDEN